The nickname that stuck most to Porfirio Lopez in Philadelphia was “Slowpez.” Nothing summarizes the Costa Rican international’s one-year tenure with Philadelphia more than that.

Lopez signed with the Union before the 2012 season and was pitched by Peter Nowak as his solution for left back, which had been manned by converted midfielder Gabriel Farfan in late 2011 after starter Jordan Harvey was traded to Vancouver.

Lopez opened the season as the starter and started the first four games. After he was exposed several times for his lack of pace and awareness, he went to the bench, never to return during the regular season, save for one 12-minute appearance on May 19.

High Point

Opening day. He was a starter. It went all downhill from there.

Low Point

It’s hard to pick one low point, but it probably had to be some time in August, when Lopez realized he was never seeing the field again for the Union.

Strengths

Lopez actually isn’t a bad defender. He has a decent sense of space, and he plays big for an outside back. He has fairly good technical skills for a defender.

Weaknesses

Lopez simply wasn’t quick enough to play outside back the way the Union wanted their fullbacks to play it. The Union were looking for a wingback. Lopez was not that. Instead, he was more of a stay-at-home defender who offered little to the attack. Considering how far upfield Philadelphia’s fullbacks were asked to play by Nowak, he was exactly the wrong player for the role. It’s worth noting that he seemed to play better at center back than at fullback for the Union.

Outlook

Lopez is gone, mercifully for him. Over time, he may prove the team’s most unqualified failure of a signing. If he’s remembered in Philadelphia, it will be for that. Some players get stuck in situations in which they are almost guaranteed to fail. Lopez was one of those players. How anyone who watched him play could have thought he was an attacking wingback is beyond me, and his tenure with the Union is the biggest indictment on Diego Gutierrez’s time as scouting director for the Union.

Yet it wouldn’t surprise to see Lopez return to the field and succeed with another club in a better situation — as long as he’s not asked to play attacking wingback. It’s not that he can’t play the sport. He just couldn’t play it here the way he was asked to do it in Philadelphia.

Author: Dan Walsh
Dan Walsh is editor and founder of the Philly Soccer Page. He spent over a decade as an award-winning newspaper and magazine reporter and continues freelance writing on the side. And he likes soccer. See more at http://www.danielwalsh.net. Email him at dwalsh@phillysoccerpage.com.

10 Comments

“Slowpez” is good, but I was a fan of “Perforated Lopez”. Hate to slam a player but this guy even did abhorrently against lower level competition… Harrisburg ran all over him during the USOC. Did not play as advertised.

As a funny note, my son was so excited when his Union Soccer school got to visit PPL park this summer and meet a real Union player. “Dad…you’ll never guess who I got to meet today…Porfirio Lopez!!”
I had to bite my tongue – Guess the U gives it’s favorite players the glamorous jobs, huh?